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- Introducing HelpJet: The AI Chatbot That Answers Your Customers’ Questions in Secondsby Syed Balkhi on 07/07/2026 at 10:00
Ever wanted to build an AI support agent for your WordPress website or WooCommerce store? Imagine customers asking a question at 2 a.m. and getting an instant, accurate answer, pulled straight from your own help docs, website content, and custom private SOPs. Plus, it can… Read More » The post Introducing HelpJet: The AI Chatbot That Answers Your Customers’ Questions in Seconds first appeared on WPBeginner.
- WPBeginner Turns 17 Years Old – We’re Doing a Giveaway ($10,000 in Prizes)by Syed Balkhi on 04/07/2026 at 10:08
It’s quite surreal to type that WPBeginner turns 17 years old today! I’m incredibly grateful to have the support of such an amazing community of website owners, small businesses, and web professionals. YOU are the best part of WPBeginner! Like every year, I will take… Read More » The post WPBeginner Turns 17 Years Old – We’re Doing a Giveaway ($10,000 in Prizes) first appeared on WPBeginner.
- WPBeginner Spotlight 25: Let AI Build Your WordPress Forms, Clean Your Database, and Boost Your Fundraisingby Editorial Staff on 30/06/2026 at 10:00
Welcome to the June edition of WPBeginner Spotlight! If there is one story this month, it’s AI becoming more integrated into WordPress. With the new WordPress Abilities API catching on fast, your favorite plugins are letting assistants like Claude and ChatGPT actually do the work… Read More » The post WPBeginner Spotlight 25: Let AI Build Your WordPress Forms, Clean Your Database, and Boost Your Fundraising first appeared on WPBeginner.
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- Ubiquiti Patches Critical UniFi Flaws Across Connect, Talk, Access, Protect, and OSby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 08/07/2026 at 14:38
Ubiquiti has shipped updates to address multiple critical security flaws impacting UniFi Connect, UniFi Talk, UniFi Access, UniFi Protect, and UniFi OS that could result in privilege escalation and arbitrary command execution. The list of vulnerabilities is as follows - CVE-2026-50746 (CVSS score: 10.0) - An improper access control vulnerability in UniFi Connect Application that an attacker
- New Ghost Phishing Wave Is Breaking Traditional Email Securityby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 08/07/2026 at 13:00
A recent EvilTokens campaign targeting businesses across the US and Europe is exposing a new email security blind spot. This “ghost phishing” technique keeps the malicious page hidden until it decrypts and comes to life inside the victim’s browser. For security leaders, the risk is clear: traditional URL checks may miss the attack while Microsoft 365 access, sensitive data, and response time
- SCMBANKER Malware Uses ClickFix Lures to Target Mexican Banking Usersby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 08/07/2026 at 12:52
A new banking fraudulent operation is targeting customers of Mexican banks, fintech, payment processors, and cryptocurrency exchanges using ClickFix lures. The activity cluster, tracked by Elastic Security Labs under the moniker REF6045, involves infecting victims through fake CAPTCHA verification pages that deceive them into running a malicious command that installs a PowerShell toolkit dubbed
- GitHub 'Verified' Commits Can Be Rewritten Into New Hashes Without Breaking Signaturesby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 08/07/2026 at 11:51
New research shows that a signed Git commit's hash is not the one-of-a-kind name that much of the software world assumes it to be. Given any signed commit, someone without the signing key can mint a second commit with the same files, author, and date, and a valid signature, GitHub still stamps "Verified." Everything a reviewer would check matches. The commit's hash does not. That matters
- The Verification Step Is the New ATO Battleground in 2026by info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 08/07/2026 at 11:30
For years, account takeover (ATO) followed a predictable script. Attackers bought stolen credentials in bulk, ran them through automated tools, and waited for matches. Credential stuffing was cheap, scalable, and for defenders, relatively well understood. That era is ending. Not because attackers gave up, but because the front door finally got harder to kick in. Passkeys are now mainstream.








